Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 316, 20 October 1919 — Page 15
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, OCT. 20, 1919.
PAGE FIFTEEN
.JOE FOX STARTS RING SERIES FOR CITY FANS
Joe Fox, boxing promoter, has re
turned to Richmond after a year's stay! on the as yet incompleted card
the series is planned for October 29. "Hope" Mullen. Tommy Tigue and Eddie Mullen, of Muncie, also Bud
Wallace and Joe Fox of Richmond are
in the South, and is planning a series I of bouts for local fans. The first of
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
Before saving a loan money RATE. Loans
monds.
MONEY TO LOAN borrowing, see us WE CUT THE RATE on every loan we make, the borrower from six to eighteen percent per annum. If you hare at the legal rate of 3 percent per month, we will lend you the to pay it off and more if you want it. at LESS THAN THE LEGAL Save the Difference made on Household Goods, Live Stock, Musical Instruments, Dla-
Automobiles and other personal property. PAYMENTS TO SUIT THE BORROWER Call. Phone or Write
BUSINESS MEN'S REMEDIAL LOAN ASSN.
Ground Floor Pal Bldg. A. L. Jenklna C. B. Beck
DIRECTORS: W. A. Bond H. H. Peelle H. G. CLARK. Manager
Phone 1315
L. A. Handley W. O. Seaney
MONEY TO LOAN
48
MONEY TO LOAN.
4 r
OPEN AN ACCOUNT WITH US 1
PUBLIC off
Buuroc Ho
ALE
Sale begins at 12:30 o'clock sharp
Lunch at the noon hour.
Everybody welcome, day with us.
Come and spend the
j g
Get our special rate on $100 $200 $300 ON OUR TWENTY PAYMENT PLAN
Get $ 50, pay back $ 2.50 a month Get $100, pay back $ 5.00 a month Get $200, pay back $10.00 a month Get $300, pay back $15.00 a month With Interest Straight time Loans to Farmers. You can pay this loan in full at any time, or pay as large amounts as you desire. Interest charged only for time Loan runs. ALL BUSINESS CONFIDENTIAL We loan on Furniture, Pianos, Victrolas, Live Stock, Implements, etc.; without removal. Call, phone or write.
RICHMOND LOAN CO, Established 1895 Room 207 Colonial Bldg. Cor. Main and Seventh Streets
S B
Under State Supervision.
PHONE 1545
Richmond, Ind.
The undersigned will hold his Eleventh Annual Fall sale of Duroc Jersey hogs, at the farm of Bruce Pullen, two and one-half mile3 west of Liberty, Ind., and one-half mile south of the Pea Ridge School House on the Liberty and Connersville Short Line pike on THURSDAY, OCT. 23, 1919 At which time I offer for sale 55 Head of Duroc Jersey Hog3, boars and gilts, of fall yearlings. February, March and April farrow. Of the best blood we can obtain anywhere. The offering will be selected from 150 head and are as good or better than we have ever raised; they are sired by Jack's Friend Chief, Jack's O. C. King, Walt's Col. Orion, Fancy Orion King, Maze's Jack's Friend and Morton's Orion King 10th. We can furnish boars and sows not of Kin.
Sale held under tent, rain or shine. of sale.
Terms made known on day
Note: This is the sale that was postponed from Oct. 8 Brace Pnallee AUCTIONEERS: Albert Morris, Indianapolis; D. C. Brookbank, Liberty; Fred Lake, Everton; G. W. Southard, Sheridan.
PtaMnc
Sale
of Big Type Polaed China
We will sell on the farm known as the Geo. Hoover .farm, now owned by L. E. Kinsey, situated about 1 mile south of Greensfork on the Washington Road, on THURSDAY, OCT. 23, 1919 the following Hogs About 20 Spring Boars, 35 Spring Gilts, -2 Fall Yearling Gilts. These spring pigs were all sired by Silver Plate No. 313437 by Fashion Master No. 292437 (we think the best boar that F. A. Williams ever owned), out of Lunker Lady No. 66379S. Pigs out of sows by such boars as Fessy's Orange Xo. 2364S5; Jumbo Chief Xo. 2200-71; Crescent Wonder Xo. 193809; Iowa Miller Xo. 360477; W's Leader, 3d, Xo. 2S9S39, etc. Lunch served by Ladies' Aid society of Greensfork at 11:30. Sale will begin promptly at 12:30. Xo catalogues will be sent out but breeding of all animals will be given day of sale, also complete pedigree given to purchaser when bought. Mrs. Kinsey will sell at private treaty, at the same place and time several Ringlet Barred Rock cockerels. VAXDERBECK & SONS, Auctioneers. WM. THOMAS STEERS, Cleric VINTON S. WILSON, LEWIS E. KIXSEY
I ! PALLADIUM WANT ADS BRING RESULTS TM ikitM
DO YOU NEED MONEY?
The nature of our business is to assist all honest people in their financial needs and obligations on a welfare basis. Possibly you have several small bills outstanding which require large weekly payments on each. Would It not be easier for you to pay off all these obligations by securing the money from us at a small rate of interest and thereby lessen the burden by repaying us at a small rate suitable to your income?
Our rate is 2Vs per month, which is 1 less than the legal rate. We loan in amounts from $10 up to $300on Furniture, Pianos, Automobiles, Live Stock, Farm Implements, Etc., without removal. We pay off loans elsewhere and advance what money you may need.
Why pay 3 or Z a month when you can borrow from U3 at 2? THERE IS A DIFFERENCE, let us explain. We make loans in'weekly or monthly payments and can give you as long as twenty months to pay it back. However, you can pay in full at any time and only be charged for the actual time the loan is carried.
If not convenient for you to call at our office, write, us, or phone 2509 and we will call at your home and explain our plan and rates to you. It will cost you nothing to investigate and ail our transactions with you will be treated in a confidential manner.
Welfare Loam Society (PORTER WARMAN, Mgr.)
11 I! ;j
il I
Capital Stock, $100,000.00. 9 North Tenth Street Under State Supervision.
Phone 2509
SALE
PUBLIC
To be held on the Reinhamer farm, 2 miles north of Richmond, 1 1-2 south of Chester, on the Chester and Richmond pike, on TfliMrSo9 Oct, 3 Beginning at 10 a. in.
PIT"
Commissioner
Me of Real.
s
Public
tate
MONo, OCT, 27ttn9 11919 At 2 R Mo, oe the Premises The Theodore Fnslher Paunnni
Located 8 miles north of Richmond and 2 miles west of Whitewater on the Arba pike Farm consists of 138 acres, of which 123 acres are under cultivation, 13 acres of good woods pasture, 2 acres in orchard. The improvements consist of a 7-room frame house in fine condition; good bank barn, 48xG0; also other outbuildings. This farm is under a high state of cultivation and is one of the best located farms in the county, on a fine gravel pike and within 2V1 miles from a good town and shipping point.
On Same Date aed at 3 P M On the Premises will be offered for sale a certain residence property owned by. the late Theodore Fisher, situated in the north part of the town of Fountain City, consisting of a two-story frame house of five rooms and summer kitchen. Property occupied by Henry Clevenger. Terms off Sale At least one-third cash in hand; balance in two equal installments due in one and two years respectively ; notes to bear 6 interest secured by mortgage on real estate.
Dickinson Tnmst Co
o
COMMISSIONER
CITY ADVERTISEMENT Department of Public Works Office .of the Board Richmond, Ind., October 13, 1919 To whom it may concern: Notice is hereby given by the board of Public Works of the City of Richmond, Indiana, that on the 13th day of October, 1919 they aproved an assessment roll showing the prima facie assessment "for the following described public Improvement Resolution named: Improvement Resolution No. 5GS-1919 For the improvement of both sides of S. 9th. St. by constructing a cement sidewalk 6 ft. wide on both sides of said street from South "II" to South "L" Street. Persons interested in or affected by said described public improve
ment are hereby notified that the! Board of Public Works of said city has fixed Mon. Nov. 3, 1919, 9 o, clock a. m., as a date upon which remon- j strances will be received, or heard, against the amount assessed against t each piece of property described!
in said roll and will determine the question as to whether such lots or tracts of land have been or will be benefitted in the amounts named on said roll, or in a greater or les sum than that named on said roll. Said assessment roll showing said
names of owners and descriptions of property subject to be assessed,! is on file and miy de seen at the
office of the Board of Public Works of said city. Harry W. Gilbert Thomas C. Taylor John E. Peltz Board of Public Works Oct. 14ht one week.
28 HEAD OF CATTLE
1 brindlo cow; 1 black Holstein; 1 Shorthorn; 1 Red Poll; 1 Jersey, "bred; 1 black
cow, all giving good flow of milk; 1 red cow; 2 Jersey cows, fresh soon; 1 Shorthorn springer; 1 Shorthorn heifer; 3 Shorthorns, fresh in November; 1 thoroughbred Shorthorn bull, 2 years old: 12 head of spring and summer calves, S steers and 4 heifers.
75 HEAD OF HOGS CO head of Duroc shoats, average 50 to luO lbs.; 1 fuli-blood Poland China boar; 3 Hampshire boars, eligible for registrations; 11 Duroc brood sows; 3 sows with 7 pigs each; 3 sows with 9 pigs each; 1 sow with 8 pigs; 1 bow with 3 pigs, and 1 sow with 10 pigs; 1 sow, will farrow by date of sale, and
1 Hampshire sow, to farrow in November. IMPLEMENTS 1 Oliver gang plow; 1 galvanized water tank; 2 Cypress incubators, one S20 eggs, one 360 eggs; 1 Busy Bee incubator, 50 eggs; 2 hog feeders; bay rope and pulleys; 30 acres, more or less, growing corn in field; 5 or 6 tons, more or less, timothy hay; 1 Union storm buggy, first class. HOUSEHOLD GOODS 1 oak bedroom suite; 3 rocking chairs; 1 center table: 1 art glass electric lamp; 1 jardiniere stand; 1 electric lamp; 1 flour bin; 1 wood heater. MISCELLANEOUS 2 beehives, 1 gas engine, 1 iron gate.
Terms Made Known on Date of Sale. Lunch Served by the Chester Aid Society. Tom Conniff and Homer Piatt, Auctrs. Frank Taylor, Clerk.
BERT JENNINGS C. L. REINHAMER
Public
Sale
Having sold my farm, I will offer at public auction on said farm, 6 miles northeast of Richmond, y2 mile northwest of Middleboro, Yi mile west .of Whitewater and Richmond
pike, on Wednesday, Oct 22, 319119
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. Notice is hereby given that the un-
i dersigned as administrator of the ; estate of Charles I Ruble, deceased. I by virtue or' an order of the Wayne j Circuit Court of Wayne County, Indij ana, will offer at public sale on the premises on Wednesday, November 5, j 1919. at 2 o'clock p. m., the undivided two-thirds of the following described
; real estate in said Wayne County, In-1 Idiana: Lot number 13 in that rart of ; i the City of Richmond laid out by
II. II. Fetta. j Terms of Sale: One-third cash, i one-third in nine months, and onethird in eighteen months from day of sale. The deferred payments to be evidenced by the promissory notes of the purchaser in usual bank form, I with six per cent, interest from date
payable semi-annually and secured by first mortgage on the real estate sold. Or the purchaser may pay all cash. DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY, Administrator. Benjamin F. Harris, Attorney. Oct. 6-13-20-27.
Beginning at 10 o'clock a. m. HORSES AND CATTLE 1 bay mare, weight 1200; 1 bull calf, IS months old; 4 Holstein heifers, to be fresh in spring; 3 good milch cows, to be fresh soon (one is full-blood Jersey and two half-blood Holstein.) 53 HEAD OF DUROC HOGS 53 5 brood sows will farrow by day of sale and bred to registered boarl : 1 registered boar: 47 shoats, average weight 75 to 125 pounds. All hogs are double immuned. FARM IMPLEMENTS, ETC. One 14-inch Cherokee walking plow; one 14-lnch P. & O. sulky; 1 Deering disc; 1 Deering binder. 6-foot cut; 1 Champion binder, 6-foot cut; 1 No. 4 Springfield feed grinder; 1 CO-gallon feed cooker; 1 large brass kettle: seed sower; forks; shovels; good leather saddle; chicken brooder, DeLaval Cream Separator. HAY, STRAW, CORN 200 bales good wheat straw; 4 tons good timothy hay; some corn in field. HOUSEHOLD GOODS, ETC. Kitchen range and cabinet; dining table and sideboard; couch; bookcase; bedroom suite and other articles of household goods.
1 PONY AND CART SEVERAL DOZEN CHICKENS Terms Made Known on Day of Sale Lunch Served By Middleboro Aid Society
WHITE GIVES (Continued from Pajjo One) eye is a mask, mobile, but on the whole secretive, furtive.
I ! Gompers looks curiously un-westem, j! I curiously Oriental, curiously lite a ! 'Persian potentate. All he would need il would be the front hall rug and a fez. j to simulate the satrap In his power, ji i Vet he is the ideal of the doughty jj , bunch of Irish labor men who surI round him and his will prevails withji out discussion or argument. They have learned to believe in him, they I know they can trust him. He Is abso- ! :lutely true, genuinely square in his j relations to those about him. For all the furtive Oriental cast to his face !i his character is Western, fundamental- ; ly American. ! Near him sits a short, dark, young, ii j pugnacious, active little man, named j, ; Woll. If he lives the world will hear 1 much more of Woll. Ha brings some t ; strain of blood to America that is : idealistic and yet his whole face is full i ; of strength and a peculiar power. lull cidentally he is ambitious. He talks i i well, has a bis aggressive face and a j pugnacious parliamentary manner. ii His trigger is a little loose and he Ii i goes off some times when he should Mnot. jjj He has not the self restraint that :' Gompers has, but he is not as old aa Ii ! Gompers by half, and he is not Orienlj i tal for a minute. He might have come ;'out of the Mennonite Colony In KanI j sas or from around the gas works in i j Chicago but America has claimed him
for her own and he will go far if some of Life's handicaps do not throw him. In the public group aside from Gary are half a dozen interesting figures. The leader of the group is Bernard Earuch six feet two, probably; trim keen, open face, gTey eyed, candid aa to countenance, quick moving, decisive, friendly, resourceful, and as little satisfied with himself as a handsome man dare be. He is the newer type of American Jew. American life has pressed almost the last vestige of his blood from his mein. It is a strong blcod. but this is a strong civilization we are making here, and in Baruch we see the two forces grappling with one
another. And the western civilization is fairly well prevailing. But he has all the high vision that his blood entitles him to, all the capacity for honorable compromise, the ability to put himself in the other man's place. He is facile, gentle and has tremendous personal charm. He leads by charm rather than by force, as David must have led of old. He yoked i:i leadership of the public e-oup with Thomas C. Chadbourne, a New York corporation lawyer, a bie fellow of an English caste, of face end figure, a fighting soul, pleasant enough but alwtys pleasant from a heighth: not without charm but always with purpose before charm. He la the chairman of a committee of fifteen, a committee which has in its power The most important work of the conference. Upon its work and largely upon his leadership will depend the success of the conference. And in so far aa leadership must direct the norma!.
must hold the average, he will do well. He is not the intellectual equal of Gary, perhaps not even of Gompers. but he will not make the mistake of high browing his leadership! It will be good direct American leadership in committees. The high and the low may reasonably expect a good job frrm him as head of this committee. He has strong important men to deal with. President Elliot, with his own notions, may not be neglected. He insists upon being heard when necessary in the conference. He is rather the leader of the Brahmin group. He knows their language, understands fkeir aspirations and they will follow him into compromises where they would not follow another. He is an intellectual force rather than a personal one. The most conspicuous of the public group is John Spargo. Sgcialis. H is smart; no other word tits him. He
i knows the game which the conference j is playing; he knows parliamen'arv j usage, is active, car. not be tripped.
likes to taik. is full of resources, hai an unbreakable will, feels himself detacher! from the group, more or less "rejected of men," and is the only Crusader in the conference. He Is of slight build, wiry bodied with a hunting dog face and brown look as to hair, mustache, complexion and eyes, a brown look, which he accentuates in. his dress. He makes a striking figure when he talks. He is restless but never out of control, and has a quick temper but knows how to smother It and is the most combative man in the conference. The public group think him to be more radical than he renllv is. His Fv.SKestions are on the wlolo conservative ra'her than radical.
wh'eh indicates great cortrol. Most of the v omen in the performance are in the public group. Miss Tarbell, Mrs. Burnham. and Miss Wald. Miss Wald has spoken more often than the others. She has a clear, f.r.e. rich voice, poise, good looks and she always lays back in her conservai ti: m in order to be fair. In the Capitalist group is one not?b!e fieri: re. that of its chairman, Mr' H. A. Wheeler. He is of conventional size, conventional dress, conventional ' face and conventional speech. But he is leader of Ins group. When he is on his feet his words come with gTeat
i ('. '.;! .
Thomas Conniff and Simon Weddle, Auctioneers. Jesse Wiecnman, Clerk.
mm.
HL OHM
Read Palladium Want Ads. Palladium Want Ads Pay well
tion as though he were choos
ing each syllable. He carries conviction because he is deliberate. He has a banker's caution, and is always fair, almost judicial in his utterances but he gives one the impression of great repression in his strength.
GUARDIAN'S SALE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned as Guardian of Ida M. Ruble (insane) by virtue of an order of the Wayne Circuit Court of Wayne County, Indiana, will offer at public sale on the premises, on Wednesday, November 5, 1919, at 2 o'clock p . m., the following described real estate in said Wayne County, Indiana, tc-wit: The undivided one-third of lot number 13
in H. H. Fetta's Addition to the City cf Richmond. Terms of Sale: One-third cash, one-third in nine months and onethird in eighteen month3 from day of sale. The deferred payments to be evidenced by the promissory notes of the purchaser in usual bank form, with six per cent. Interest from date, payable semi-annually and secured by first mortgage on the real estate sold. Or, the purchaser may pay all cash. DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY, Guardian, Benjamin F. Harris, Attorney. Oct. 6-13-20-27.
